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							- There was a family of five mice-children that lived in an opera-house in Milan. Their father
 
- had been eaten, not by a cat, as one might expect of mice, but by several fish who
 
- had set an elaborate trap involving no less than four decoy eels and an intricate
 
- pulley system.
 
- The father had been in an open relationship with several female mice, each of whom
 
- was seeing several other male mice, and so several of them lived with the family
 
- simultaneously; the children never knew whether the next day would find one subset
 
- of their "mothers" and "fathers" replaced by another set. However, one of
 
- them—a beautiful mouse with mottled brown-and-black fur—was always
 
- there for them, being the biological mother of two of them and highly attached
 
- to the other three. For the purposes of this story, I will call her Suzie, which is
 
- a reasonably accurate translation of her name from the original Milanese Mouse
 
- dialect, inasmuch as any collection of squeaks can be translated into a human language
 
- at all.
 
- One day, she and the five children, along with her two boyfriends, snuck into the
 
- opera house, where a performance of _Il dissoluto punito, ossia il Don Giovanni_ was
 
- being prepared for that weekend. Excited for the opera, Suzie insisted that the bored
 
- children stay there to keep her seat for when she got back from getting refreshments
 
- for the performance from the corner mouse store. The children sat expectantly for
 
- a time, and then became bored and wandered around the upper boxes, looking for a
 
- good vantage point for a mouse wishing to watch an opera.
 
- It was not long until they found a box which was occupied by a Milanese inventor
 
- called Massimo della Piscina Pubblica. He was performing the finishing touches on
 
- a mannequin he had created so as to give the illusion that he had a date for the
 
- opera, whereas in fact he was remarkably unattractive to women because of his complete
 
- and utter lack of a nose. (He never considered that he could instead invent a nose
 
- for himself; and if he had, he probably would have made it poorly, as he got zeroes
 
- on most of the tests at _L'academie des inventeurs_ in Paris and slept through a lot
 
- of classes. His nose would have actually been hilarious, though, so it is a pity that
 
- he did not think of it.)
 
- The mice thought quickly and dove into the mannuequin, and began operating it
 
- independently. He was shocked to see his date come to life, and began to dream that
 
- he was Giapetto, and the mannuequin was his own hypersexualized Pinnochio. The mice
 
- began to make the mannuequin smile, and operated the voicebox through strings and
 
- pulleys.
 
- "What is wrong with you?" they asked. Massimo della Piscina Pubblica was shocked, but
 
- also confused, because he did not speak English. So they repeated, "Qual è il tuo
 
- problema?" He stammered, and stuttered, and the mice laughed in a mousey way inside
 
- of the body, and the people who were filing into the opera began to stare at the
 
- famous inventor and his oddly beautiful and yet somehow strange date.
 
- "Cosà?" he asked, trying to understand what had happened to his mannequin. If he had
 
- nostrils, they may very well have flared; we can only guess.
 
- The mice never dignified him with a response, they left the box and found their
 
- mother who was sneaking in a box of mouse popcorn and some mouse sodas; they picked
 
- her up and began living in the basement of the opera-house, where they could listen
 
- to the music without having to look at the atrocious makeup that some of these
 
- singers had on.
 
- Occasionally they'd go upstairs in their human-suit and give Massimo the finger. He
 
- would try to thumb his nose at them and fail, and subsequently be laughed out of
 
- the opera house. Kind of sad, really.
 
 
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